2

I have a Javascript file like that

/**
 * My Comment Line1
 * My Comment Line2
 */
var a = 123;
/**
 * My Comment Line3
 * My Comment Line4
 */
var b = 456;

I am using node.js to read the file and want to extract comments in this file.

I use this regexp

/\/\*\*((?:\r|\n|.)*)\*\//

However this extracts

/**
 * My Comment Line1
 * My Comment Line2
 */
var a = 123;
/**
 * My Comment Line3
 * My Comment Line4
 */

My program have a loop to extract matched block one by one. So I want a RegExp to extract

First loop

/**
 * My Comment Line1
 * My Comment Line2
 */

Second loop

/**
 * My Comment Line3
 * My Comment Line4
 */

The rule is simply that comment block starts with /** and ends with */. Inside a comment, all characters are allowed.

Could anyone help me? Thanks!

4 Answers 4

6

Try this : (it'll much ANY type of comments) - Live demo here : http://regexr.com?30jrh

(/\*([^*]|[\r\n]|(\*+([^*/]|[\r\n])))*\*+/)|(//.*)

Have a look :

enter image description here

5
  • I love this answer too! This is a more generic answer. Thanks!
    – Alex Yeung
    Apr 11, 2012 at 2:53
  • @AlexYeung You're welcome, my friend! :-) It's one of the most proven regexs I've used for multi-line comment matching. It catches many "hidden" cases (like */ within a comment, which is still a comment, huh?) + it also get single line comments (//). Apr 11, 2012 at 2:54
  • 2
    What about var s = "This is a /*string*/"? Your regex would get a false positive on that. I don't think it's possible to correctly cover all edge cases without actually parsing most of a script.
    – kpozin
    Jul 19, 2012 at 18:17
  • For anyone struggling with syntax errors var commentPattern = new RegExp('(\\/\\*([^*]|[\\r\\n]|(\\*+([^*\/]|[\\r\\n])))*\\*+\/)|(\/\/.*)', 'g');
    – homerjam
    Sep 25, 2015 at 19:55
  • This will also have false hits on urls: var url = "http://www.stackoverflow.com"; Anything within quote marks should not be captured Jun 14, 2016 at 19:17
2

Here's a regular expression for that:

/\/\*\*(.|\n)+?\*\//

And here's a demo.

4
  • @Dr.Kameleon: Check the update, please, including the demo. (You can take off your downvote now...)
    – Ry-
    Apr 11, 2012 at 1:45
  • 1
    @Dr.Kameleon: I don't really care what "RegExr" says, this is JavaScript and the jsFiddle, y'know, proves it does work. Nevertheless, enable the "dotall" and "global" flags to have it work there.
    – Ry-
    Apr 11, 2012 at 1:48
  • It works! But why? The key point is the ?. I don't understand... :(
    – Alex Yeung
    Apr 11, 2012 at 2:47
  • 1
    @AlexYeung: The ? after a quantifier makes it non-greedy, i.e. it will try to match as few characters as possible.
    – Ry-
    Apr 11, 2012 at 3:00
0

The other answers did not quite work for me. Here's what did work, in Node.js, parsing Javascript.

/(\/\*([^*]|[\r\n]|(\*+([^*\/]|[\r\n])))*\*+\/)|(\/\/.*)/g
0
/(\/\*).*?(\*\/)|(\/\/).*?(\n|\$)/s

Match opening and closing multiline tags and anything inbetween

(\/\*).*?(\*\/)

Or match a single line open comment that is terminated by a new or end of line

(\/\/).*?(\n|\$)
1
  • the one line match fall on lines with URLs like 'httm://www...." @Mwayi. doyou have a solution that will prevent this pleas?
    – Israel Gav
    Sep 18, 2015 at 18:34

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